policycoreutils 2.2.5-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

policycoreutils (2.2.5-1) unstable; urgency=medium


  * Team upload.
  * New upstream release
  * debian/control: Bump Standards-Version to 3.9.5 (no further changes)

 -- Laurent Bigonville <email address hidden>  Sun, 29 Dec 2013 14:43:17 +0100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian SELinux maintainers
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian SELinux maintainers
Architectures:
linux-any
Section:
utils
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Trusty release universe utils

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
policycoreutils_2.2.5-1.dsc 2.1 KiB e2903090b6f8a9b9d5dce23a237c21d16c35620488712a03fd259904cb2befd5
policycoreutils_2.2.5.orig.tar.gz 4.7 MiB bbf850a8c3c2f371f439d6525663eecdd3a737acd594d2f27f8d8f3a07830cc4
policycoreutils_2.2.5-1.debian.tar.gz 37.1 KiB bc06cfe27009fa85fb19d8e8b5c60db465723e98ef7597fc45d8524ff03924bc

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

policycoreutils: SELinux core policy utilities

 Security-enhanced Linux is a patch of the Linux® kernel and a number
 of utilities with enhanced security functionality designed to add
 mandatory access controls to Linux. The Security-enhanced Linux
 kernel contains new architectural components originally developed to
 improve the security of the Flask operating system. These
 architectural components provide general support for the enforcement
 of many kinds of mandatory access control policies, including those
 based on the concepts of Type Enforcement®, Role-based Access Control,
 and Multi-level Security.
 .
 This package contains the core policy utilities that are required
 for basic operation of an SELinux system. These utilities include
 load_policy to load policies, setfiles to label filesystems, newrole
 to switch roles, run_init to run /etc/init.d scripts in the proper
 context, and restorecond to restore contexts of files that often get the
 wrong context.
 .
 It also includes the mcstransd to map a maching readable sensitivity label to
 a human readable form. The sensitivity label is comprised of a sensitivity
 level (always s0 for MCS and anything from s0 to s15 for MLS) and a set of
 categories. A ranged sensitivity label will have a low level and a high level
 where the high level will dominate the low level. Categories are numbered
 from c0 to c1023. Names such as s0 and c1023 and not easily readable by
 humans, so mcstransd translated them to human readable labels such as
 SystemLow and SystemHigh.

python-sepolicy: Python binding for SELinux Policy Analyses

 This package contains a Python binding for SELinux Policy Analyses.